In 1558, Queen Mary I of England died and her sister
ascended the throne as Elizabeth I. Mary had become the last English monarch to adhere to Roman
Catholicism. Under her rule, hundreds of Protestant reformers — including John Rogers, compiler of the
Matthew's Bible — had been hanged or burned at the stake.
But Elizabeth had a different agenda. She quickly broke all ties with the Vatican, and soon
Catholics began to feel unwelcome in many areas of England. Many Catholics had seen the persecution
of the Protestants under Queen Mary, and now they felt like they could be the vulnerable ones
under new Queen Elizabeth.

The Pope at the time — Pius V — was not a happy camper. And
a large number of Catholic clergy and lay-people fled from England when, in 1570,
Pope Pius declared open war
on England. However this hardly bothered Queen Elizabeth. The Vatican never did have an army, and it was doubtful
that Pius could ever talk any other country into attacking England.

The On-The-Move College in France

Several of these fleeing Catholics established an English
College in Douay, France in 1568. Ten years later, it moved to the city of Rheims. Then in 1593
the College moved back again to Douay. (Maybe they didn't like the neighbors.) It was here that the seeds
for an English Catholic Bible were nurtured.
The Protestant English Bibles were immensely popular, even among some Catholics. And many of those
at Douay felt that the Catholic Church needed to retaliate with their own translation.

But before any work could begin on an English Catholic Bible, the Vatican needed to soften its stand
on Bible translations. The only Bible version recognized by the Catholic Church
was the Latin Vulgate, and it had been that way for more than 1,000 years! That kind of tradition
doesn't go down fast. But times were changing, and eventually even the Pope began to realize it would be futile to
continue to fight against an English translation of the Bible.

A Catholic Bible in English becomes a Reality

Pope Pius Vagreed to an English
Translation

So Gregory Martin, an Oxford scholar and
one of the Catholics who fled England, translated the Latin Vulgate into English.
When the New Testament was released in 1582,
the College was located in Rheims. The Old Testament translation was completed at about the same time, but lack
of funding kept it from being released until 1609. This shows well the Vatican's attitude toward this
new translation. If the Pope had really wanted an English Bible, he would have seen that resources
were available to print it.

Gregory Martintranslated from theLatin Vulgate

The Old Testament waited for almost 27 years until money could be found for its
printing! The Pope felt like he was being forced into abandoning the Latin Vulgate; and although
he vowed not to fight this new translation —
he did not vow to support it. By the time the Old Testament was published, the College had moved
back to Douay. So this translation quickly took on the name Rheims-Douay Bible.

One of the differences between Catholic Bibles and Protestant Bibles had to do with the Apocrypha. This is
a group of 14 Bible books whose inspiration is not universally accepted. Protestants had never felt that
these books were worthy of the same respect as the other books of the Bible. In previous Protestant
versions, the books of the Apocrypha had been combined together and printed in a separate section from the Old and New
Testaments. Now Catholics, on the other hand, believed (and still do) in the full inspiration of these books, so Rheims-Douay interspersed them throughout the Old Testament. An extensive set of
Notes was also included to assure that Scripture was interpreted in conformity to Roman Catholic doctrine.

In the Preface to the Bible, the translators stated that their purpose was to provide a proper translation
of the Bible in English to counteract the Protestant versions whose authors were charged with
"corrupting both the letter and the sense by false translation, adding, detracting, altering,
transposing, and all other guileful means, especially where it serveth for the advantage of their
private opinions." Some would question whether the Catholics did any better.

Say What???

The style of the Rheims-Douay Bible was very
"Latin" — little attempt was made to translate words that had a special meaning in
Catholic theology. So readers came across words like "azymes",
"prefinition", "scenopegia", and "exinanited".
These words were as confusing to people in the 1500's as they are to us today.

Below are a
half-dozen examples of the differences between the Rheimes-Douay and the King James Version.
Can you guess which one is the Catholic Bible?

King James Version

Rheims-Douay Bible

Give us this day our daily bread. (Matt. 6:11)

Give us today our supersubstantial bread.

Take care of him and whatsoever thou spendest more, when I come again, I will repay thee.
(Luke 10:35)

Take care of him and whatsoever thou shalt supererogate, I, at my return, will repay thee.

Thou shouldest ... ordain elders in every city, as I had appoined thee.
(Titus 1:5)

Thou shouldest ... ordain priests by cities, as I also appointed thee.

I am the good Shepherd.
(John 10:14)

I am the good Pastor.

Repent ye: for the kingdom of heaven is at hand.
(Matt. 3:2)

Do penance: for the Kingdom of heaven is at hand.

That at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, of things in heaven, and things in earth, and things
under the earth.
(Phil. 2:10)

That in the name of Jesus, every knee bow of the celestials, terrestrials, and infernals.

One of the most famous Old Testament examples of the
Rheims-Douay's interesting translations is in Psalms:

Before your thorns did understand the old briar: as living so in wrath he swalloweth them.
(Psalm 58:9)

HUH??? Is it any wonder that a writer at the time called the Rheimes-Douay's
translation of the Book of Psalms "a positively unintelligible English version of the
unintelligible Latin version of a very uncertain Greek translation of ancient Hebrew text." My favorite New Testament
example is:

And beneficence and communication do not forget, for with such hosts God is promerited.
(Heb. 13:16)

The Bible's Impact

The Rheims-Douay Bible never had much success
in England. It
wasn't so much the quality of the translation — although that certainly was part of it. The main reason why the
Rheims-Douay wasn't successful was that there wasn't much of a need for it. It had been written for
English-speaking Catholics. But for centuries, to Catholics the Bible had been a book in Latin; it was read,
translated, explained and enforced by the clergy. Although some Catholics at the time risked excommunication by
possessing a Geneva Translation, most Catholics were quite satisfied with the status quo. They just weren't ready
for an English Bible.

So the Rheims-Douay Bible never
attained the reputation of some of the popular Protestant versions available at the time.
However, it was one of the versions that was consulted by the translators of later
English Bibles. And some of the Latin wording of Rheimes-Douay even made its way into the
greatest English Bible of the day — the King James Version.

Use the Menu on the left to view actual pages from a
Rheims-Douay Bible.